๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐ ๐๐๐๐. (
saltburnmods) wrote in
draino2024-05-13 07:36 am
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
Entry tags:
"๐๐๐๐" โฃ MAY TDM
MAY 2024 TDM
Welcome to SALTBURNT, a panfandom smut/thriller game based off the film Saltburn, where characters are encouraged to indulge their deepest desires. The money never runs out and the liquor never stops pouring, so you may as well indulge from the bounty. Of course, things are rarely what they seem, and the manor itself seems to have a consciousness of its own. Throw parties, trash the house, engage in youthful merriment, but remember โ dangers come out at night, and no one, no matter how rich you are, is safe from demons lurking in the shadows.
Threads can be considered game canon, provided the players agree. Players can also start fresh upon acceptance into the game. Prompts on the Test Drive can be used for in game logs.
WELCOME TO SALTBURNT
It's the hangover more than the light streaming in through half drawn curtains that wakes you up, your brain rattling in your skull, your mouth dry and cottony, your stomach churning with whatever it is you drank last night. If self preservation is your strong suit, you might turn over in bed and see a few painkillers laid out for you on a silver dish, accompanied by a glass of water. If it isnโt, stay in bed and wallow โ eventually a maid will be in to tear your curtains open, saying, "Breakfast is served," and scurrying out quietly, invisibly. Breakfast? Maybe itโs normal for you. Maybe it isnโt.
You're drawn from the room, either by the mystery, or an undefinable urge that could be supernatural in origin, or could be your hunger catching up to you. It's almost nostalgic, the walk to the dining room โ have you been here before? Were you drawn up to this estate in a car? Havenโt you done all this already? Maybe you mosey around a library, maybe you run into your suite mate in your adjoining bathroom. Regardless, seemingly all hallways, covered in priceless artworks and ancient relics from times long past, lead to the dining room, where a comically long table houses the Balfours and their many guests, who seem just as disgruntled and confused as you. No matter. "The breakfast is self-serve," they say. But not the eggs.
If you want to leave, youโll have to tell Giles, the housekeeper, who will arrange a car for you that mysteriously, or perhaps suspiciously, never arrives. Unfortunately, confronting Giles about it is near impossible, as heโs as good at being invisible as the rest of the house staff. Of course, thereโs no reason why you canโt just walk out. The front gates are easy enough to jump over, even if the walk towards them gives you a strange sense of foreboding, or just outright discomfort, as if the ground itself doesnโt want you to leave. Those more sensitive or fragile might find they canโt make the jump, no matter how physically able, or desperately wanting. Still, a strong person could continue on, over the fence and into the lush English countryside. The feeling doesnโt dissipate, though โ this sense of wrongness, almost sickness, like a weight on your back. Walk into the evergreen, carry on, but the strongest will make it perhaps a mile or so before the weight of dread and paranoia brings you to your knees, and then to your face, flat in the middle of a dirt road. What were you thinking? Is this really better?
Wake up with a hangover, in a bed, the curtains drawn, the maid saying, "Breakfast is served," before scurrying out. The painkillers are there, just like you remember. In fact, itโs all exactly how you remember, as if you never left an imprint the first time, or any mess you made was cleared away while your back was turned. Walk to the dining room, find everyone there eating away at their breakfast. Itโs self serve, naturally. Just not the eggs.
"We dress for dinner," says Portia, with a kind, if discerning smile. "Black tie."
You're drawn from the room, either by the mystery, or an undefinable urge that could be supernatural in origin, or could be your hunger catching up to you. It's almost nostalgic, the walk to the dining room โ have you been here before? Were you drawn up to this estate in a car? Havenโt you done all this already? Maybe you mosey around a library, maybe you run into your suite mate in your adjoining bathroom. Regardless, seemingly all hallways, covered in priceless artworks and ancient relics from times long past, lead to the dining room, where a comically long table houses the Balfours and their many guests, who seem just as disgruntled and confused as you. No matter. "The breakfast is self-serve," they say. But not the eggs.
If you want to leave, youโll have to tell Giles, the housekeeper, who will arrange a car for you that mysteriously, or perhaps suspiciously, never arrives. Unfortunately, confronting Giles about it is near impossible, as heโs as good at being invisible as the rest of the house staff. Of course, thereโs no reason why you canโt just walk out. The front gates are easy enough to jump over, even if the walk towards them gives you a strange sense of foreboding, or just outright discomfort, as if the ground itself doesnโt want you to leave. Those more sensitive or fragile might find they canโt make the jump, no matter how physically able, or desperately wanting. Still, a strong person could continue on, over the fence and into the lush English countryside. The feeling doesnโt dissipate, though โ this sense of wrongness, almost sickness, like a weight on your back. Walk into the evergreen, carry on, but the strongest will make it perhaps a mile or so before the weight of dread and paranoia brings you to your knees, and then to your face, flat in the middle of a dirt road. What were you thinking? Is this really better?
Wake up with a hangover, in a bed, the curtains drawn, the maid saying, "Breakfast is served," before scurrying out. The painkillers are there, just like you remember. In fact, itโs all exactly how you remember, as if you never left an imprint the first time, or any mess you made was cleared away while your back was turned. Walk to the dining room, find everyone there eating away at their breakfast. Itโs self serve, naturally. Just not the eggs.
"We dress for dinner," says Portia, with a kind, if discerning smile. "Black tie."
LET THEM EAT CAKE
CONTENT WARNINGS: sex, drugs, alcohol.
Up until now, the outdoors of Saltburnt have seemed immaculately well groomed, landscaped until not a leaf is out of line. However, on the night of a planned party you were all informed of, the grounds have transformed into a psychedelic fever dream before your eyes, with very little resembling the polished exterior youโve become acquainted with. Large fixtures have been erected around the grounds in a paid homage to Roman architecture, huge columns set up in invitation to the party beyond. Everything is bathed in pastel colors of pink, blue, yellow and green, opulent and gaudy in equal measures, everything decorated with golden filigree. The theme? Rococo. And yes, youโre expected to arrive in costume. (0 points awarded for historical accuracy โ this isnโt school, you arenโt being graded on anything but your appearance.)
Vanilla flavored cocktails line elaborately decorated banquet tables, and while alcohol seems readily in supply, any food other than snacking Doritos and caviar with mother-of-pearl spoons is hard to find. Of course, thatโs other than the dessert table, which is sorted with an arrangement of confections: macaroons of all colors, cupcakes, cookies, and of course, cakes. Some are imperially designed, with frilly icing decorations and sprinkle pearls on top, but the real showstopper cakes are the anatomically correct ones, shaped in the imagine of naked bodies. On first glance, the lifelike realness of them makes the bodies look like peaceful corpses laid flat against the sugary delights โ some, potentially, with an appearance uncannily like a guest like you, currently residing in Saltburnt. But, when someone cuts into one, it's plain to see the flesh is just fondant, the insides all cake and cream and jam. There is enough detail on the inside of the cakes that gives the impression, if you were to cut one horizontally down from head to toe, you'd see the perfect snapshot of the inside of a human body, organs, bones, and all.
Seeking other entertainment? In homage to the Affair of the Diamond Necklace, small diamonds have been hidden around the party, in red solo cups, in full liquor bottles, in plain sight, in trees and bushes. Collect, steal, and pickpocket as many as you can โ anyone with diamonds at the end of the party has been guaranteed a special prize from Portia herself, but you'll have to win to figure out what it is. (A replica of the Queen's necklace, lucky you!)
In addition, on the grounds there is a lifesize version chess, alternating colors between light and hot pink. Anyone interested will quickly be informed, this is SlapKiss Chess, where the rules are simple enough to follow. Chess as usual, only when one piece steps on the square of another piece, the first person to step off the square loses the ground and is kicked from the game. You can knock your opponent off however you like, through whatever means available to you. Naturally, things get pretty bloody and pretty PDA, depending on your poison of choice โ with the name of the game comes two very frequent weapons against your opponent.
Of course, the night does come to an end eventually. Pass out where you are or drunkenly make your way up to you room in a drug-induced stupor. Either way, you'll wake up hungover, in bed, trying to fill in all the blanks from last night.
Up until now, the outdoors of Saltburnt have seemed immaculately well groomed, landscaped until not a leaf is out of line. However, on the night of a planned party you were all informed of, the grounds have transformed into a psychedelic fever dream before your eyes, with very little resembling the polished exterior youโve become acquainted with. Large fixtures have been erected around the grounds in a paid homage to Roman architecture, huge columns set up in invitation to the party beyond. Everything is bathed in pastel colors of pink, blue, yellow and green, opulent and gaudy in equal measures, everything decorated with golden filigree. The theme? Rococo. And yes, youโre expected to arrive in costume. (0 points awarded for historical accuracy โ this isnโt school, you arenโt being graded on anything but your appearance.)
Vanilla flavored cocktails line elaborately decorated banquet tables, and while alcohol seems readily in supply, any food other than snacking Doritos and caviar with mother-of-pearl spoons is hard to find. Of course, thatโs other than the dessert table, which is sorted with an arrangement of confections: macaroons of all colors, cupcakes, cookies, and of course, cakes. Some are imperially designed, with frilly icing decorations and sprinkle pearls on top, but the real showstopper cakes are the anatomically correct ones, shaped in the imagine of naked bodies. On first glance, the lifelike realness of them makes the bodies look like peaceful corpses laid flat against the sugary delights โ some, potentially, with an appearance uncannily like a guest like you, currently residing in Saltburnt. But, when someone cuts into one, it's plain to see the flesh is just fondant, the insides all cake and cream and jam. There is enough detail on the inside of the cakes that gives the impression, if you were to cut one horizontally down from head to toe, you'd see the perfect snapshot of the inside of a human body, organs, bones, and all.
Seeking other entertainment? In homage to the Affair of the Diamond Necklace, small diamonds have been hidden around the party, in red solo cups, in full liquor bottles, in plain sight, in trees and bushes. Collect, steal, and pickpocket as many as you can โ anyone with diamonds at the end of the party has been guaranteed a special prize from Portia herself, but you'll have to win to figure out what it is. (A replica of the Queen's necklace, lucky you!)
In addition, on the grounds there is a lifesize version chess, alternating colors between light and hot pink. Anyone interested will quickly be informed, this is SlapKiss Chess, where the rules are simple enough to follow. Chess as usual, only when one piece steps on the square of another piece, the first person to step off the square loses the ground and is kicked from the game. You can knock your opponent off however you like, through whatever means available to you. Naturally, things get pretty bloody and pretty PDA, depending on your poison of choice โ with the name of the game comes two very frequent weapons against your opponent.
Of course, the night does come to an end eventually. Pass out where you are or drunkenly make your way up to you room in a drug-induced stupor. Either way, you'll wake up hungover, in bed, trying to fill in all the blanks from last night.
A MIDNIGHT'S DREAM
CONTENT WARNINGS: body horror, cannibalism, sex.
Things feel normal, for awhile. The first day after the party anything brewing inside feels like the byproduct of intoxicants ingested, so it's likely you're expecting to feel a little off. The next day, you wonder just how long this hangover is supposed to last. By the third day, something feels indefinably wrong, and you ache down to your bones.
Did you eat the cake? Probably, yes โ but did you find it a littleโฆ addictive?
There's an urge inside you, to taste it again. What part of the body did you eat before? The fingers? Suddenly, you need to sink teeth into whoever has fingers closest to you, even though you know what'll happen. You'll find flesh, blood, and bone, hardly any of it appetizing. And yet. The compulsion is undeniable, and once you get what you want, you bite down on someone's body where you feel the need and, shockingly, it tastes good. Sweet. Moreover, it feels good to be consumed. Eater and eaten alike, all of you want some more, gluttonous down to your core.
It seems a curse has overtaken Saltburnt, turning everyone who ate cake into cake. Bones turn to cracked caramel, blood into loose icing. Oddly, it seems the only people safe from the curse, other than the people who didnโt eat anything, are the ones who won and wear their gifted diamond necklace, though that doesn't necessarily mean people won't try to take a bite out of them anyway, and it doesn't mean they wouldn't like being eaten too, depending on what they're into. It's all a frenzy, a fever dream. You eat and eat and eat and are eaten, shocked by how much flesh โ well, cake โ someone can lose.
On the fourth day, you wake up in your room again, as you have every other day, whole and unblemished, offended by the scent coming from outside your windows. Look, and find the sight of rotting cake abandoned in heaps, taking the form of errant limbs, spotted with mold and decorated with buzzing flies. Look for long enough, and you might once again find some weirdly similar to your own body, feeding hornets that flock to your sugary sweet flesh.
Weird dream, right?
Things feel normal, for awhile. The first day after the party anything brewing inside feels like the byproduct of intoxicants ingested, so it's likely you're expecting to feel a little off. The next day, you wonder just how long this hangover is supposed to last. By the third day, something feels indefinably wrong, and you ache down to your bones.
Did you eat the cake? Probably, yes โ but did you find it a littleโฆ addictive?
There's an urge inside you, to taste it again. What part of the body did you eat before? The fingers? Suddenly, you need to sink teeth into whoever has fingers closest to you, even though you know what'll happen. You'll find flesh, blood, and bone, hardly any of it appetizing. And yet. The compulsion is undeniable, and once you get what you want, you bite down on someone's body where you feel the need and, shockingly, it tastes good. Sweet. Moreover, it feels good to be consumed. Eater and eaten alike, all of you want some more, gluttonous down to your core.
It seems a curse has overtaken Saltburnt, turning everyone who ate cake into cake. Bones turn to cracked caramel, blood into loose icing. Oddly, it seems the only people safe from the curse, other than the people who didnโt eat anything, are the ones who won and wear their gifted diamond necklace, though that doesn't necessarily mean people won't try to take a bite out of them anyway, and it doesn't mean they wouldn't like being eaten too, depending on what they're into. It's all a frenzy, a fever dream. You eat and eat and eat and are eaten, shocked by how much flesh โ well, cake โ someone can lose.
On the fourth day, you wake up in your room again, as you have every other day, whole and unblemished, offended by the scent coming from outside your windows. Look, and find the sight of rotting cake abandoned in heaps, taking the form of errant limbs, spotted with mold and decorated with buzzing flies. Look for long enough, and you might once again find some weirdly similar to your own body, feeding hornets that flock to your sugary sweet flesh.
Weird dream, right?
DIRECTORY
no subject
He doesn't pull his hand back out of Daniel's grip, though he could have done so -- and worse -- without thinking. His palm remains flat against Daniel's chest, the rise and fall of his breathing, the soft curls of grey hair. Beneath Daniel's fingertips, his own pulse beats lazily, impossibly slow but still present, stirring borrowed blood through his unliving veins. A cursed creature, feeling it no less because of his juxtaposition against Daniel's fragile human pride, his aging body. It's been a long time since Armand had cause to regret his dark gifts. He regrets them now, for a moment, as Daniel drops his gaze, unable to look upon him. Regrets what they did to that boy in San Francisco. How they broke him, and remade him.
"Ask a question," he suggests. "One question. Off the record."
no subject
There are questions he wants to ask that he shouldn't even be able to shape, based off glimpses of file names, but why jump feet first into all the vampire history stuff if it's just gonna be off the record anyway?
"Which city's your favourite?" he asks instead. "Not because of whatever happened there, don't say Paris just because it's where you met Louis, she's gotta stand on her own merits."
no subject
"Mm," he hums, pensively. "Venice." So: none of the locations Daniel already knows him to haunt, instead a sliver of his previous life, a name, a city. The place where he was changed, where he knew love, and born again, and again, and again. Not because he loves it, the city, but because of what it was at that time. Shelter, inspiration, gateway. Because of what it means, what he became, why he will never go back.
"Paris is beautiful," he explains, falling back into that habit of explaining to Daniel. "I was at home there. But it was just a city. Venice.. was everything."
no subject
The main difference being, of course, Armand's hand on his skin. Daniel lets it stay, and when Armand has finished speaking for however long he wishes, Daniel rewards being given an answer by lifting his own hand to cup Armand's sharp jaw. His usual sceptical mien is all bright idolatry as he brushes his thumb over Armand's lower lip.
"And just like that, a little less of a mystery," Daniel murmurs.
no subject
He doesn't talk about the bitter times, the cruelty and abuse in the brothel. How close he had skirted to madness. He doesn't name the man -- the vampire -- who condemned him, but Marius' influence in the story is profound. His first love. His first in many things.
Eventually he runs out of words for the moment, his gaze shadowed with memory. He blinks when Daniel reaches for him, betrayed by a moment of surprise at the soft touch against his mouth. He allows it, lips parting slightly to show human teeth. A small gust of breath across Daniel's hand as his body responds.
Glancing down, then up again, to observe Daniel through the fan of his eyelashes. He tucks his chin a little, to follow Daniel's thumb and touch it with his tongue and teeth, to bring it into his mouth.
no subject
But what the fuck does he know about bodies, or vampires? His expertise is in pulling out ribbons of narrative. This is a classic one, he's gotta admit, even if he's a bit too old to be a convincing Bella Swan.
"That's good," he says, trying to sound in control, ludicrously. If he had any actual control over this situation he'd make Armand keep telling him about cities until the sunrise startled him to bed.
no subject
Then Armand pulls back, lets him go, entirely. He tugs his hand out from Daniel's slackening grip, withdraws with a shifting of his weight, resettles on the end of the couch with the opposite leg folded over the other. Places his hands, folded, on his knee. He studies Daniel with his lambent eyes, a degree of warmth in his expression.
"As I said, Venice was everything. But we both know that it's a small part of a larger story. Far longer than Louis'. Or," a flicker of tension, "Lestat's. And my story is only a small part of an even greater one. Venice, Paris. Rome. San Francisco. New York, Dubai. They are modern cities now, but they've lived for a long time. Well, some of them. Dubai is a child, squatting on the edge of the desert. A fishing village with delusions of grandeur. But a good place to hide, in plain sight."
no subject
It's been a point of pride for him to not be involved in all the homosexual drama. To have the remote control and the popcorn, safe behind his laptop and notebook. Enjoying it, sure, even when it got lurid. Sex isn't any less fascinating just because it's between men, is what he's been telling himself.
Now here he is, brushing his forefinger and thumb together to feel the tackiness, aware he's run hot. He doesn't need Armand calling Dubai a baby again to be reminded that the pretty young thing he's coveting is older and more powerful than he is.
Is there still brandy? He takes another desperate drink, reckoning with the disappointment that Armand isn't the one taking a drink.
"You don't need to read me a history book," he manages, annoyed that he feels dishevelled next to Armand's poise. It's gotta be late by now, it was late when they ran into each other outside. He should go to bed before he gets cranky. "I'm not looking to learn the long history of vampirism. I've got two particular points of interest, and one's on hold while I spend the advance."
no subject
But still, a mote of pity, an awareness of his own responsibility for the parts of Daniel carefully and surgically altered as he himself was once altered, a perversion of memory and time.
"My history is the history of vampirism," he continues, placid in the face of Daniel's unhappiness. "I am a vampire. I cannot be what I am not. You felt more comfortable, in Dubai, when you believed that Louis was the only one, and willing to be like you. You watched him enact his human rituals, the dinners, the schedules of rising and sleeping. Partially because he insists upon it, for his own reasons. Partially for your comfort."
He leans forward, eyes ablaze, canine teeth lengthening in his mouth. "You want to know me, Mr Molloy, but you are afraid to face the truth. You believe that I am, on some level, still human. Because, you believe, if I am not.. you are in love with something you can never possibly understand."
no subject
"Nothing's unknowable." That's his credo as a writer, to pin impossibilities and concepts onto paper, to make physical the complex mixture of philosophy and empathy and research that it takes to shape a man. Daniel's sole god has been writing since he was nine years old, it's the only tool he has to make sense of the world. Even "off the record" he still takes mental notes on their conversation, third thoughts analysing what he's told; it's not part of a secret plan to publish, that's just the way his mind works.
"Believe me, I'm well aware of what you are." Exciting and terrifying in all the ways he's different. Dangerous, much more dangerous than Louis. "But maybe vampires aren't as far away from humanity as you want to think." They both kill. They both love. They both spend too much time thinking about their own nature. They set up communities with rules and then break them. They fall in love. They go mad. More and more, listening to Louis' story, he's come to understand: "What's the difference between Dubai and Abu Dhabi aside from a few extra layers of detritus and some magic powers?"
Probably he should have denied the love thing instead.
no subject
He sits back, frowning unhappily. There's a certain irony to Daniel speaking of the unknowable, but Armand has ceased to be amused by it. Part of him wants to shatter those locks and throw open the vault and let it all stream out, if only to have someone to talk to who truly understands him. Another cost measured and paid by his traitorous human heart. He misses Louis with an almost physical ache.
"Have you wondered why you're not afraid of us?" He asks, petty in the way he wants to see Daniel flinch.
no subject
It's not wholly true, he's afraid of getting hurt, of the way old emotional scars threaten to rupture. But sitting here getting dick-teased by some twinky little vampire doesn't match the way it felt to get divorced, to attend the funerals of people he once knew - or worse, to turn down the invitation because there's a goddamn pandemic and he's too sick to safely travel.
no subject
"Daniel," Armand murmurs, watching him. He moves on the couch, shifting his weight closer once more. Raises his hand to brush the backs of his fingers over Daniel's cheek. He's sorry, in a way, for how they've used him.
no subject
"He was right, you are a cunt," Daniel says, not sure whether he means Louis or the vision of Lestat that Louis had conjured so vividly, but remembering Armand's face when Louis had spoken of him, of his presence. A clear memory of Armand, clearer than all the time in between it, the hazy belief in being transported out of the penthouse to here. He doesn't know what airline he flew. He doesn't know what brand of cigarettes he was smoking, in that shitty San Francisco apartment with yellow light filtering through the newspaper they'd plastered over the window. Oh Daniel, now who doesn't know the meaning of his own story?
"I think you should fuck off for a bit," he says, trying to keep his voice steady; he doesn't want to face the stairs again but he doesn't want to keep having this conversation anymore.
no subject
"Very well."
All too easy, the withdrawal, falling back on Rashid's careful politeness, a subservient dip of his eyes as he takes back his hand. They have time, perhaps, in this place. Not much time, but enough that Armand doesn't mind taking a step back, knowing very well when a push in the wrong direction might be as good as a knife.
He stands, allowing Daniel to see him standing, and straightens his clothes. Casts a last, sorrowful look at the man on the couch. Regretful, perhaps, if Daniel wants to see him that way. Then, between the blink of an eye, he's gone, leaving Daniel with his thoughts, and the empty room.
no subject
After a few moments with his thoughts he also hauls to his feet and starts to search the study for something to write on and with, settles back in his seat with a fresh glass of brandy and tries to process what he's feeling in the only way he knows how.
He's hungover the next morning at breakfast, dips toast soldiers into his boiled egg like a spoiled British child and ignores all attempts at conversation; he's not the only one, more than a few people are all avoiding each other's eyes. Maybe writing about torrid gay vampire affairs has awoken the tabloid journalist in him, because he finds himself taking an interest in that shit, the petty relationships between the youths, real Red Top, Page Three kinda stuff. One girl oblivates at length about her dream where she was made of cake and someone ate her.
Daniel also has dreams of being eaten, in between the restless pain sweats. He doesn't see Armand again for a few days, which feels like a longer time than it is. He keeps turning over his feelings like a worry stone; but he's also starting to discover it's not just that the UK is backwards as hell. Trying to search stuff on the internet ("late life gay feelings" "age difference gay relationship issues") pretty quickly demonstrates everything feels back at the start of the millennium.
Getting to the bottom of this is the perfect excuse to bury all his awakening memories and feelings and the burgeoning concern that he might get really sick in this fucking place, and refuse to think about them. So Armand can watch as he turns social, chatting with the other people stuck here (now sources) and ambles about the manor and its surrounds looking for clues. Listening to a Spice Girls CD very seriously. Walking up and down way too many stairs for a guy in his condition. And then one morning, early, fully dressed in a black tshirt and golf pants, waiting by the pool when Armand finishes his rigorously scheduled swim.
nts get some titty icons
He can, at least, be about in the day, though spending too long in the sunlight drains his reserves and leaves him scalded about the edges. But it has the advantage of making it easier to blend in with the mortals in the manor house. And it allows him to watch Daniel, lounging in doorways and hovering on the stairs, making patient eye contact whenever Daniel happens to glance in his direction.
Armand knows how to wait for what he wants.
In the mornings, just after dawn, when the bite of hunger strikes hardest and the grounds are deserted, he swims, measuring his compressed fraction of time in lengths and turns and breaths between strokes. He becomes aware of Daniel's arrival at one end of the pool, but doesn't let him stop him, allowing his next set of laps to carry him towards the journalist.
Arriving at his end of the pool, he fetches up against the wall and pauses, treading water, clearing his eyes with a swipe of his hand.
"Good morning, Mr Molloy," he says, reaching up to set his hands on the edge of the pool so he can lift himself out, clad in small tight briefs that leave little to the imagination, water streaming off his body. With a singular lack of self consciousness, he crosses to a nearby sun lounger and picks up a towel, rubbing it over his face before he looks at Daniel again.
"Are you here to swim?"
no subject
Still doesn't look away, though.
"Do I look like I'm here to swim?" he retorts. It would probably be good for him, but that's never really influenced his decision. His arms are folded, trying to seem unflappable and unflappรฉd. 'No, I'm here for you. To talk." To apologise, but he'll never admit that and it won't happen aloud.
no subject
Armand's eyebrows lift a little. He gestures with a wave of his hand to the sun loungers beside the pool, indicating that Daniel can sit down if he wants, a casual declaration of ownership in a space that doesn't actually belong to him.
"Please, go right ahead."
no subject
Depravity. It's not the first time he's had to wrestle with these sort of thoughts, he's lives a life with a startling number of pretty young half-clothed men in it, but this is the first time it's felt real. Urgent. Dangerous.
He takes a seat on the deck chair. Thinks very hard about giving Armand the finger in case he's skimming to measure his effect on Daniel, the cheater. "Okay. So. This place. I'm pretty sure we've travelled twenty years back in time. Louis's here, out of his habitat for humanity, can we talk about that? Are you guys getting your takeout arrangements rerouted or just eating free range?"
That last: accusing, in the way Daniel gets about murder, but like his pretence at not noticing Armand's body, it's only skin deep. He has morals, and ethics, in theory โ in practise, he's fascinated that Louis might take up killing again.
Also this isn't an apology. The apology is there in his heart, though, maybe.
no subject
"The servants are providing for us, so far," Armand replies, a rare piece of honesty, since he assumes Daniel will find out about it soon anyway. He leaves the manner of their aid up to Daniel's all too active imagination. "But Louis and I are not the ones you need to worry about, Mr Molloy. Though I'm glad to hear that Lestat hasn't discovered you yet."
Assuming he would have mentioned it. Assuming that Lestat wouldn't have left him alone, if he knew.
no subject
That this might be dangerous for Daniel, or bad for Louis and Armand both, is all a secondary concern to the possibility of a third primary source. He has to meet this guy. He has to. Daniel gets the impression Lestat likes to talk about himself. Even without his laptop, Daniel is capable of being a very good listener.
So up he gets, about to go throw himself into the Wolfkiller's maw.
no subject
"Daniel." Armand's eyes are coppery discs, reflecting the glimmer of the pool. He holds up a hand, palm out. Calming, forbidding. "It would be a mistake to seek him out. If he knew that you had been told everything that Louis has imparted upon you.. he would kill you without hesitation. He is.. unpredictable at the best of times. Caged by whatever it is keeping us here? He will be far worse. I can't let you go to him yet."
no subject
"Yeah," he says with a dismissiveness that can't hold up as sincere when he's staring at Armand like this. "I won't. I'll be careful. Though you'll have to teach me how to make sure he doesn't just pick it outta my brain."
no subject
The singular drawback of the Spell Gift, as Marius had taught him, is that it's impossible to convince a mortal of anything they haven't already considered. It can only manipulate the truth, not create it. But it may be a small, hidden truth. To do more -- one needs to be more powerful. And willing to deal with the consequences.
He tucks his towel into one hand as he steps closer to Daniel. The pool water has dried somewhat on his cool skin, but he still leaves damp footprints on the concrete floor.
"Good boy." Indulging himself, he reaches up to touch a single fingertip beneath Daniel's chin, lifting his face a little more. Then he withdraws again, but remains standing before him. Pulls back, just slightly, on the Spell Gift. "Lestat's powers are formidable. But he is easily distracted. And I will do what I can to make sure you are unharmed."
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)